Re: Grain

A couple of things I learned recently that you might find interesting.

The American distilleries have their own sources for corn, some buying direct from farmers, others from silos. While some of the corn is grown in Kentucky, most of it is from Indiana.

The rye mostly comes from the Dakotas, Minnesota, or Canada.

The wheat used mostly comes from Kentucky, usually directly from the farmer.

One silo in Louisville supplies all of the rye for the industry.

The malt comes from Milwaukee. Malt is in short supply right now and the maltsters are allocating supplies.

Chuck,

As I recall from my distillery visits last year at least 2 distilleries (4 roses and WT) claimed that they used imported rye from Sweden. I think our bistre climate serves rye quality good. We do use a lot of rye ourselves for bread. Rye bread in Sweden is not bread with a certain rye content; it is bread made of entirely rye.

Re: Grain

I find this extremely interesting and wonder if (as for so many things in the whiskey world) this is a surviving trace of a historical pratice originating in the distant past. And if so, it might point to the European origins of the distillation of rye in America (or rather, this would be additional data or evidence).

Re: Grain

It may be that the one grain silo in Louisville that deals in rye gets it from different places, including Sweden. Silos are just distributors, after all, and rye is not a big crop here.

Although I didn't mention it, HipFlask guessed right. Their yeast also is from Milwaukee.

As for malting, very few of the Scottish distilleries do their own either. Just like only Brown-Forman makes its own barrels and nobody makes their own stills. Some things are just better left to specialists.

Re: Grain

That is very interesting information actually. I wonder why the distillers don't do their own malting like the Scotch distilleries do?[/quote]

The only distillery that does all the work still by it self is Springbank(Campbelltown) all others malting just a wee bit themselves for the touristindustry,the most of the malted barley comes from big plants nowadays just because it is cheaper.There is a big malting plant in what was the Port Ellen distillery on Islay and a big plant in/near Glasgow serving most of the country and even Japan.
Eric.

Re: Grain

Interesting info indeed. Couple questions:

Any idea what percentage of the total annual production of these grains goes to the whiskey industry?

When I visited the Tabasco factory some years ago (a distillery tour of a different sort), the tour guide explained that they have pepper fields not only in Louisiana but also in Central and South America. The reason was that they couldn't risk a crop failure in a given area cutting off their pepper supply for a whole year, so they spread the production around to mitigate the risk. Does the whiskey industry have similar contingency plans with its grain suppliers?

Thanks,
Larry

I got the St Louis blues, I'm blue as I can get.
I sent Louis to the liquor store, and he ain't come back yet.
-Jimmy Johnson, "The Twelve Bar Blues"